Saturday, May 26, 2012

Goya

Fransisco Goya  (1746–1828) was a mediocre painter, sentimental, and generally offensive, but then between 1819 and 1823 he stopped painting pudding-y aristocrats and began to manically adorn his dinning a sitting rooms with a series of 13 tenebrous and nightmarish murals. They are monstrous and magnetic, almost reminiscent of the psychotic James Ensor, and strike such a sharp contrast with the cloying quality of his earlier paintings which, in my humble opinion, should be lost to the annals of Western art. In addition to twelve of the thirteen paintings I have also included a number of his more disturbing etchings, many of which were created in response to the Napoleonic wars and the various schisms Spain endured in its wake.



















Saturday, May 19, 2012

Exquisite Object #6: Cigarette Holders

I'm not really sure what the point is, they certainly don't filter anything, I suppose they prevent one's finger's from getting that awful film of stale nicotine adipocere, but utilitarianism is hardly my concern and no matter what they're elegant as fuck. The illustrious individuals who have employed these exquisite objects serve only to demonstrate this point further.








Saturday, May 5, 2012

Shintaro Kago


Shintaro Kago (b. 1969) is a Japanese guro manga artist. While much of his work can be classified as pornographic even his more extreme works, appearing only in adult publications, have a high degree of artistic merit. He uses comic format and conventions to complex and interesting ends pushing the limits of meta-fiction both in dialogue and in visual form. The work is odd, extremely so, even the more... masturbatory works are highly self aware, playing with the topoi of hentai and making numerous nods to their own peculiarity and perhaps even perverse nature. His Style is also gorgeous, almost anti-manga in its construction and craft.







Thursday, May 3, 2012

Exquisite Object #5: Kewpie Dolls

Kewpie Dolls, based on the 1909 comic strip Kewpie by Rose O'Neil, were tremendously popular in the early twentieth century. I really don't have much more to say except that I spend a lot of time trying to look like one.